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Wolf Man (2025 film)

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2025 film by Leigh Whannell

Wolf Man
A forest scene, a full moon above, below a girl and a woman holding a flashlight.Theatrical release poster
Directed byLeigh Whannell
Written by
  • Leigh Whannell
  • Corbett Tuck
Produced byJason Blum
Starring
CinematographyStefan Duscio
Edited byAndy Canny
Music byBenjamin Wallfisch
Production
companies
Distributed byUniversal Pictures
Release date
  • January 17, 2025 (2025-01-17)
Running time103 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$25 million
Box office$16.8 million

Wolf Man is a 2025 American horror film directed by Leigh Whannell from a screenplay he co-wrote with Corbett Tuck. A reboot of The Wolf Man (1941), the film stars Christopher Abbott, Julia Garner, and Sam Jaeger. The plot follows a family man seeking to protect his wife and daughter from a werewolf, only to become infected and slowly transform into the creature. Jason Blum produces alongside his Blumhouse Productions banner.

The film was announced in 2014 and was to be part of the Dark Universe, a shared cinematic universe centered on the Universal Monsters. Aaron Guzikowski and David Callaham were attached to write the script. After the failure of The Mummy (2017), Universal shifted its focus to standalone films. The success of Whannell's The Invisible Man (2020) rekindled Universal's interest in the Monsters franchise. They accepted a pitch by Ryan Gosling, who was also set to star, for a new Wolf Man film with Derek Cianfrance to direct. However, Cianfrance left the project in 2023 and Gosling dropped out of the role, remaining as executive producer while Whannell took over as director with a new cast. Principal photography occured in New Zealand in early 2024.

Wolf Man was released in the United States by Universal Pictures on January 17, 2025. The film received mixed reviews from critics and has grossed $16.8 million.

Plot

In 1995, a hiker's vanishing in the remote mountains of Oregon sparks speculation about a virus linked to the region's wildlife. During a hunting trip in the area, a young Blake Lovell and his stern father Grady spot a mysterious creature lurking in the forest and hide in an elevated hunting blind.

Thirty years later, Blake lives in San Francisco with his daughter Ginger and workaholic wife Charlotte. Like his now-estranged father, he struggles to control his temper, causing a strain on his marriage. One day, he receives a death certificate for Grady, who went missing, and the keys to his childhood home. He decides to vacation there, in an attempt to repair his relationship with Charlotte.

Seeking directions, they encounter a local, Derek, who leads them to the house as the sun sets. Before they arrive, a creature drives them off the road, scratches Blake's arm, and drags Derek away. Blake frantically leads his family to the house, turning on the generator and barricading the entrance to protect them from the monster outside. With his arm bloody and infected, Blake starts to show signs of illness: losing teeth, sweating profusely, and experiencing noise sensitivity. Hearing the creature, he puts his ear to a side door, only for the monster to grab his foot through the pet door and injure him further before Charlotte stops it by hitting it with a hammer.

Charlotte grows increasingly worried as Blake loses some motor functions and his ability to speak and understand her. His hair starts to fall out, as do more teeth and fingernails, with fangs and claws growing out, and his vision becomes distorted. Fur grows on his body, and to fight the pain in his arm, Blake gnaws on it like an animal, frightening her. She spots a run-down car outside and manages to jumpstart it. Before the family can drive away, the creature smashes the windshield, forcing them to seek shelter atop a greenhouse. Blake signals Charlotte to take Ginger back to the house and runs in the opposite direction to make the monster follow him.

Moments later, a limping and more deformed Blake returns. He vomits a severed finger and menacingly approaches Charlotte, scaring her and Ginger. Realizing the danger he puts them in, he prepares to leave, but the creature finds its way in and attacks them. Blake puts himself between the monster and his family, and in the struggle, he bites the creature's neck and kills it. Recognizing a tattoo on its arm, Blake realizes the monster is his infected father. He runs outside, the final stages of his werewolf transformation taking hold. Unable to control himself, he attacks his family, who flee to a nearby barn.

Blake claws his way in, using his newfound night vision to sneak towards them in the dark, but is caught by a beartrap that Charlotte laid down. He chews off his ensnared foot and continues pursuing as Charlotte and Ginger flee to the surrounding forest and hide in a hunting blind as the sun rises. Blake climbs up, and Charlotte points a rifle at him. Realizing Blake is in pain and wants to die, the family shares a final look as Blake lunges and Charlotte fatally shoots him. They comfort a dying Blake before walking out of the forest, taking in the beauty of a valley he once described seeing as a child.

Cast

Christopher Abbott at the Toronto Film Festival in Toronto in 2024.Julia Garner at the Berlin International Film Festival in Berlin in 2020.The film stars Christopher Abbott (left) and Julia Garner as Blake and Charlotte Lovell.

Leigh Whannell makes a vocal cameo in the beginning as Dan.

Production

Development

In July 2014, Universal Pictures announced its plan for a shared cinematic franchise, later dubbed Dark Universe, centered on their Universal Monsters library — which was to include The Wolf Man. In November 2014, Aaron Guzikowski was confirmed to be writing the reboot of Universal's The Wolf Man. In June 2016, Deadline Hollywood reported on rumors that Dwayne Johnson was considered for the titular role. In October, David Callaham was hired to rewrite the script. In 2017, The Mummy was released as the first film in the Dark Universe; its launch was both a critical and commercial failure and resulted in Universal deciding to shift its focus on individual storytelling and move away from the shared universe concept with the cancelation of The Wolf Man and other films in development.

The success of Whannell's previous monster film inspired Universal to make Wolf Man.

Reporter Justin Kroll said the critical and commercial success of Leigh Whannell's The Invisible Man for Universal "scrap the universe concept" and loosened restrictions for the talent in front and behind the camera, allowing them to decide how they wanted to execute their films in terms of budget and MPAA rating and invite "big name talent" to pitch their ideas. By early 2020, Universal had been hearing project ideas for a year and a half from filmmakers seeking to develop characters in the franchise. These meetings included Ryan Gosling's pitch to remake The Wolf Man and star in it, with Lauren Schuker Blum and Rebecca Angelo writing a screenplay described as tonally similar to Nightcrawler (2014). Around this time, make-up artist Mike Marino molded an early version of the werewolf.

Several filmmakers were considered to direct, including Cory Finley, whose film Thoroughbreds (2017) was reportedly well liked by Universal, and Whannell, who was advised by Jason Blum of Blumhouse Productions (producer of several of his projects, including The Invisible Man) to reconsider after initially declining. (In February 2020, Whanell had mentioned his interest in making a werewolf film during a press interview for The Invisible Man.) In July 2020, Whannell entered negotiations to write a film treatment and direct. He and his wife Corbett Tuck co-wrote the first draft of their version by pulling from the feeling of confinement and isolation caused by the COVID-19 pandemic to touch on the inevitability of illness and death, setting the story primarily in one location to make the drama "intimate", and drawing from themes of parenting and marriage. The disease that the main character contracts in the film is meant to resemble neurodegenerative diseases like ALS, which killed a close friend of Whannell's; a deleted scene involved Blake's ALS-stricken mother.

Pre-production

After Whannell left the project due to scheduling conflicts, Derek Cianfrance entered negotiations to write and direct in October 2021, having directed Gosling in Blue Valentine (2010) and The Place Beyond the Pines (2012). The film was officially green lit around the conclusion of the 2023 Hollywood strikes. In December 2023, Cianfrance and Gosling were reported to have exited the project due to scheduling conflicts, with Whannell returning to take over directing the screenplay he co-wrote with Tuck, while Cianfrance received off-screen additional literary material credit. Gosling, who retained an executive producer credit, was replaced by Christopher Abbott in the lead role. Abbott was the first actor Whannell approached for the role over Zoom, being familiar with his work; the next day, Whannell saw Abbott perform the off-Broadway play Danny and the Deep Blue Sea (2023) opposite Aubrey Plaza at the Lucille Lortel Theatre in the West Village of Manhattan while in crutches due to a shattered kneecap, which sealed his decision to cast him.

During pre-production, Whannell hosted weekly film screenings for his crew in a theater inside the studio where the film was shot, with selections such as The Shining (1980), The Thing (1982), The Fly (1986), Little Children (2006), Blue Valentine (2010), Amour (2012), and Under the Skin (2013). In 2024, Julia Garner, Sam Jaeger, and Matilda Firth joined the cast. Wolf Man was the third project between Abbott and Garner, after Martha Marcy May Marlene (2011) and a fifth season episode of Girls (2016). To prepare for the role, Abbott watched hours of animal videos on YouTube to grasp the wolf's body language. Garner interviewed working mothers about societal pressures put on women and suggested that her character go through the seven stages of grief over the course of the film, which takes place over one night, after reading books on grief and loss.

Filming

Principal photography began on March 17, 2024, with New Zealand standing in for Oregon. Forest scenes were shot in the South Island's Queenstown, while sets for the farmstead—the house, barn, and greenhouse—were built inside Wellington's Lane Street Studios in the North Island, with Upper Hutt as the production's base camp. The house's exterior was constructed on a nearby farm in Mangaroa. Ruby Mathers was the production designer. Whannell and director of photography Stefan Duscio (their third film after Upgrade and The Invisible Man) were influenced by cinematographer Roger Deakins' "grounded approach" to Prisoners (2013) and Sicario (2015). Light shifts to convey change in character perspectives were accomplished practically on set by manually adjusting the lights. The moving truck that drives off a cliff had to be imported from the United States to have the driver's seat on the left. The special effects team took six days to dismantle, lighten, and reassemble it onto a custom support frame; the work had to be completed without welding, cutting, or grinding because of a fire ban resulting from a dry spell in the area. A 50-foot Technocrane was used for the greenhouse sequence.

Arjen Tuiten and Pamela Goldammer were the prosthetics & special make-up effects designer and key artist, respectively. Whannell compiled a list of werewolf designs, such as those portrayed by Lon Chaney Jr. in the original The Wolf Man (1941) and David Naughton in An American Werewolf in London (1981) and those included in The Howling (1981) and Dog Soldiers (2002), before settling on one; he was inspired by Heath Ledger's take on the Joker in forming an original design for an established character. Whannell went with Tuiten's first design of the werewolf, which Tuiten first showed him by making a life-sized model. Applying the prosthetics on Abbott took two and a half to seven and a half hours depending on the stage of the transformation.

Post-production

Vocal distortion to convey Blake's diminishing ability to understand the human language was done by layering the dialogue on top of it in reverse. Composer Benjamin Wallfisch and editor Andy Canny, who both worked on The Invisible Man, returned for Wolf Man. Like The Invisible Man, the score was recorded at AIR Studios in London. For the final piece, "Goodbye", which plays during the film's ending, Whannell asked Wallfisch, who had initially written "something kind of spare and haunting" for the scene, to compose a track for the film to end on a "big emotional note" inspired by the closer, "Denouement", for the soundtrack of The Invisible Man. Sound mixing was completed at Warner Bros. Studios Burbank. Visual effects were employed for the character's increasingly animalistic perspective to add haze, computer-generated insects, translucent skin to reveal veins, and flashing eyes with retroreflective highlights. The film cost $25 million to produce.

Marketing

In August 2024, during Universal's Halloween Horror Nights in Orlando, a booth revealed the film's logo and teaser image, and on September 4, an actor took the stage for a photo-op performing as the film's werewolf. The werewolf design—a creature with a "balding head", "long white hair on the back of his head and as facial hair", "long, bony fingers", and "sharp teeth"—drew divisive reactions from online users and journalists. On September 6, Universal released a teaser trailer, poster, and synopsis. Hannah Shaw-Williams of /Film suggested that the timing of the teaser's release was "damage control" over the poorly-received werewolf design, noting the absence of the titular creature in the teaser. Whannell described the design reveal as a "debacle", as Universal did it without discussing it with him or the film's make-up artist Arjen Tuiten; he unsuccessfully tried stopping it by calling Jason Blum and later retorted that it was "like judging the Freddy Krueger makeup by a costume at Spirit Halloween." Social media analytics firm RelishMix reported that online marketing led to 136.5 million interactions, 50% behind the average for a wide horror release. Summarizing word of mouth from audiences, it wrote, "Mixed negative-leaning chatter on Wolf Man finds some viewers taking umbrage with the look of the film, from the cinematography to the design of the titular creature."

Release

Wolf Man was released in the United States by Universal Pictures on January 17, 2025, including engagements in IMAX, 4DX, ScreenX, and D-Box. It was previously scheduled to be released on October 25, 2024. The film's Hollywood premiere at the TCL Chinese Theatre on January 7 was canceled because of the Palisades Fire.

Reception

Box office

As of January 20, 2025, Wolf Man has grossed $12 million in the United States and Canada and $4.8 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $16.8 million.

In the United States and Canada, Wolf Man was released alongside One of Them Days, and was projected to gross $15–21 million from 3,354 theaters in its opening four-day MLK weekend. Variety said the wildfires in Los Angeles were not expected to affect the film's box office performance, and that audience reception would determine its success. The film made $4.5 million on its first day, including $1.4 million from Thursday night previews. It went on to debut to $10.2 million in its opening weekend (and a total of $12 million over the four-day frame), coming below projections and finishing third at the box office behind One of Them Days and holdover Mufasa: The Lion King (in its fifth weekend). Deadline Hollywood noted that the opening was less than the $17.9 million opening for Wolf in 1994 (unadjusted for inflation); IMAX and premium large format screens accounted for 41% of the opening box office, and exit polling indicated that 50% of attendees who saw the film went because of the genre.

Critical response

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 52% of 172 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 5.8/10. The website's consensus reads: "Director Leigh Whannell's attempt at bringing a fresh psychological dimension to the Wolf Man comes at the expense of proper scares, although fans of body horror will still find some tasty morsels to chew on." Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 51 out of 100, based on 45 critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews. Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "C–" on an A+ to F scale, while those surveyed by PostTrak gave it a 54% overall positive score, with "a very low" 34% saying they would "definitely recommend" it.

Positive reviews came from The Hollywood Reporter, criticizing the dialogue but praising the performances and tension. The Chicago Tribune described the film as offering a "crafty, patient and deceptively good" first half but a plodding second. NME gave it four stars out of five, writing that despite an unconvincing creature design and heavy-handed themes, the film has energetic pacing and delivers intense, claustrophobic action sequences. Rolling Stone opined that the film ambitiously blends body horror and familial trauma with allegorical weight, but while it delivers gripping moments and good performances, it ultimately falls short with familiar horror tropes and uneven execution. In a more mixed review, Time Out called it an atmospheric and occasionally unsettling exploration of fatherhood and transformation that, despite Abbott's best efforts and effective body horror moments, lacked the emotional depth and scares needed to elevate it to the level of its influences like The Fly.

Vulture was critical of Whannell's decision to make the movie about the transformation. They described the film as visually striking but underdeveloped, with suspenseful set pieces but shallow characterizations and an underwhelming exploration of its themes, leaving it feeling incomplete and emotionally weightless. IndieWire labeled Wolf Man a missed opportunity, blending what they called a promising premise about parental fears with an underwhelming execution marked by unconvincing special effects, a lack of genuine tension, and a muddled exploration of its themes, succumbing to predictable storytelling and uninspired horror elements despite Whannell's attempts to bring a grounded emotional core to the classic monster. The Associated Press lambasted the film as a sluggish, underwhelming reboot that squandered its classic monster premise with muddled themes, uninspired scares, and a lack of emotional or narrative depth, rating it zero out of four stars.

Notes

  1. Attributed to multiple sources.

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External links

The Wolf Man
Larry Talbot
Original series
Other films
Films by Leigh Whannell
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